Randle is a 6-foot-9, 19-year-old left-hander who averaged 15.0 points and 10.4 rebounds, helping the Wildcats to the NCAA championship game, where they ultimatel lost to Connecticut.

"He's got big-time skills," said General Manager Mitch Kupchak after the selection. "He can put the ball on the floor. He can drive and get to the rim."

"He plays and competes at a very, very high level. He loves contact," continued Kupchak. "Although I don't expect Kobe [Bryant] to talk to him until January, I think he'll like him."

Bryant has a reputation for being hard on rookie teammates.

Reports surfaced that Randle might need surgery to remove a screw from his foot after a high school injury, but the forward recently denied surgery was under consideration.

"I met with the best foot doctor in the country, and he said he wouldn't do anything for my foot," said Randle, after his workout at the Lakers' facility in El Segundo last week. "There's no scheduled surgery or anything. I feel healthy, athletic. I'm moving great -- no problem recovering. I'm ready to go."

"He had surgery about 18 months ago. He's been cleared," said Kupchak. "We just felt that his talent was such, that even if he did have to miss a period of time ... it would not impact his career. At his age, even if he does reinjure, there's no reason why he can't play 12-14 more years at a very, very high level."

Randle also auditioned for the Lakers, in an impressive workout against player development coach (and former Lakers power forward) Mark Madsen.

The Lakers passed on the opportunity to draft a number of available players at No. 7, including Indiana's Noah Vonleh, Louisiana-Lafayette's Elfrid Payton, Creighton's Doug McDermott, UCLA's Zach LaVine, Michigan's Nik Stauskas, Syracuse's Tyler Ennis, NBA D-League's P.J. Hairston and Kentucky's James Young -- all players who worked out for the Lakers in El Segundo.